Letting Go

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Drew McAuliffe has lived in the small town of Rock Bay most of his adult life. He’d like to be happy, but not at the cost of having his private life under his nosy neighbors’ microscope, so he keeps his bisexuality under wraps.

After a messy breakup that caused him to pack up and move to Astoria, on the Oregon coast, Mason Anderson decides to avoid drama of the romantic kind. All he wants is to start over—alone.

But Drew and Mason were meant to meet. The long looks and awkward half hellos chance offered were never going to be enough. But when they do finally come together on the worst night possible, misconceptions and problems from their pasts get in the way. Until Mason learns to trust again—and until Drew learns to let go of who he thinks he is—a real connection is nothing but a pipe dream.

Letting Go

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I was really disappointed in this book. I had so enjoyed Coming Home and thought that Letting Go wouldbe just as appealing. Unfortunately for me, it wasn't even close. I had a difficult time with Drew and his procrastination over who he was and his inability to accept it. Mason seemed a weak character and I guess I just didn't click with them.

Review of Letting Go

By Rosa Hamalainen on Jan 28, 2013 03:01

This was slightly disappointing. I was initially thrilled to discover that Mason and Drew from Coming Home had their own book. I'd found their beginnings very interesting in the prequel. The execution of this wonderful idea for a story was a bit clumsy however. The first part of the novel is little more than a summary of the previous book's events. After it finally got to the part where the first leffat off, it seemed like no time at all before it needed rather abruptly. The characters are great, but the plot is somewhat anticlimatic with no real conclusion to some of the major plot-points. Not bad but it could've been so much better.